Presentation
Tips
Updated
22 October 2019
x
The
first impression a client or supervisor has of your strategic
recommendations more often than not comes from an oral
presentation. For
that reason, any opportunity to make a oral presentation of your
work
should be taken seriously. Also think of it as an
opportunity to
set the tone and frame the discussion. To put it another way: It is your opportunity to shine!
In organizing your presentation, it is important to remember
the
difference between written and oral presentations.
Written presentations are non-linear - readers can stop, start,
review
or skip ahead as they wish. In oral presentations, the
listeners
get
only one shot at your message. For that reason, oral
presentations
should focus on "the big picture." That means focusing on the
major
points, using imagery, symbolism and repetition. For example, a
common
mistake when presenting a strategic communications plan is
presenting
every goal, objective and tactic as if one is reading a recipe.
A
better approach is to first unveil the all of the goals, then
revisit
each one. There is no one correct pattern to follow. However, it
is
important to remember that logical
is
better than linear.
Don't underestimate the importance of repetition - give the
audience a
chance to remember the things you want it to remember. An
often-used
pattern in presentations is to tell the audience what you plan
to tell
it, then tell it, and then tell it what you told it.
Also
remember
that it is not just what you say, but how you say it that
makes a lasting impression. Body language is defined
as messages
you
send, intentionally and otherwise, through your appearance,
body
movements,
tone of voice and use of visual aids. Your style of
relating to
others
- professionalism, courtesy, sensitivity, humor, and behavior
under
fire
- carries a strong message. First impressions are
lasting.
In just the first few seconds after meeting, we are making
value
judgments
about one another. You want those first impression
to be
good.
It is also true that vision reinforces
aural learning. It has been said that you
remember 10% of what you read, 20%
of what you hear, 30%
of what
you see and 50% of
what you
hear and see.
Charles
Reilly, Jr.
and Dorothy Lynn wrote The
Power of
In-Person Communications. In it they
cite three reasons people have butterflies: you ignore your own
game
plan,
you are afraid that you will be boring and you are afraid that
you will
say what your audience has heard before. Reilly and Lynn
say are
ways to replace those butterflies with "positive energy:"
- Do your
homework (know
your subject and audience)
- Be upbeat
(have a
positive attitude)
- Select a
key target (This
doesn't mean pick
out one person at the exclusion of all others. What it
does mean
is try to relate to an individual. Then move on and
relate to
another.
Soon, you will gain rapport with the entire room.)
- Establish
good eye contact.
If you are
doing a general presentation, focus on the whole room.
Don't
favor
one side of the room over another. If you are making a
persuasive
presentation, trying to influence a decision, focus on the
lion.
- Be helpful
(Make the
audience feel that you
are there as a friend, to help in their understanding)
- Enjoy
yourself.
Have fun.
Some other useful tips
that
will help you through your presentation:
- Dress
appropriate to the context
of
your appearance. Wear something
comfortable.
Ill-fitting
clothes and poorly-chosen accessories detract from a
positive
image.
Avoid loud ties or shirts. Jewelry, buttons or other
symbols of
affiliation
or cause must be avoided. When in doubt, dress toward
the
conservative
direction.
- Start with
a subject with which
you are
truly excited and want to communicate to others.
It will
alleviate
many common vocal problems. Talk off the cuff, relying
as little
as possible on notes. This means that you have to be
familiar
with
the material. That means practice. One
exception: if you
are
making an appearance where accuracy and precision of
language is
important,
then you should use a prepared text. You don't want an
"ad lib"
to
distort your intended message.
- Speak
conversationally -
especially if
amplification is being used. There is no reason to
shout into a
microphone.
Let it do the work. Let the warm, personable qualities
of your
voice
out. Speak so you can be understood easily with
appropriate pace
and articulation. Work on the pronunciation of
troublesome
words.
If some words make you uncomfortable, try to avoid them
altogether.
- Speak the
language of your
audience.
That means that you should avoid jargon. The use of
jargon to the
wrong audience can send the wrong message ("I am smarter
than you
are.").
Tell your audience what is in it for them. As simple
as this may
sound: they are more interested in things they are
interested in than
they
are in things in which you are interested.
- Avoid
language mannerisms
- "uh, like,
y'know, hey man." Also avoid Archie Bunker talk - poor
grammar,
sloppy
pronunciations and misused terms. Use shorter words in
an active
tense to spark the imagination and help elevate language
from the
dreary
to the powerful.
- Stand
straight and comfortably
with weight
evenly balanced. Avoid slouching or fig leaf
or reverse
fig leaf
arm positions. Don't wrestle with the lectern.
Avoid happy
feet. Don't smoke, chew gum, or scratch in
embarrassing
places.
Map out your movements. If there is more than one
presenter, make
sure that only those involved in the presentation are "on
stage."
- Use visual
aids that enhance the
understanding
of your message. Do not use them if they will
distract
from what
you are saying. Good ideas deserve visual
support. Keep
them
simple - don't try to cram to much information into one
visual/slide. Use color. Use key words.
Speak to the
audience,
not your visuals. Don't read from your visuals.
And don't
misspell
anything.
Home